How to maximize value from ACO arrangements Accountable

Transcription

How to maximize value from ACO arrangements Accountable
Accountable
care 2.0
How to maximize
value from ACO
arrangements
Contacts
About the authors
Chicago
New York
Minoo Javanmardian
Senior Partner
+1-312-578-4712
minoo.javanmardian
@strategyand.pwc.com
Joyjit Saha Choudhury
Partner
+1-212-551-6871
joyjit.saha.choudhury
@strategyand.pwc.com
Ashish Kaura
Partner
+1-312-578-4838
ashish.kaura
@strategyand.pwc.com
Jack Topdjian
Partner
+1-212-551-6601
jack.topdjian
@strategyand.pwc.com
Vikas Garg
Principal
+1-312-578-4651
vikas.garg
@strategyand.pwc.com
Jennifer Yaggy
Principal
+1-212-551-6550
jennifer.yaggy
@strategyand.pwc.com
San Francisco
Deepak Goyal
Partner
+1-415-653-3499
deepak.goyal
@strategyand.pwc.com
Joyjit Saha Choudhury is a partner with
Strategy& based in New York, where he
focuses on strategy for health payor and
provider clients. He leads the firm’s medical
value management practice, and co-leads
the firm’s Medicare and Medicaid Center of
Excellence.
Vikas Garg is a principal with Strategy&
based in Chicago, where he is a core
member of the firm’s healthcare and
operations practice and works with payors
and providers. He is a senior member of the
firm’s medical value management practice.
Jack Topdjian is a partner with Strategy&
based in New York. He leads the firm’s
North American healthcare technology and
operations practice and global healthcare
consumerization practice. He specializes in
large-scale transformation and capability
building in the healthcare industry.
Minoo Javanmardian, Ph.D., is a senior
partner with Strategy& based in Chicago.
She works with the firm’s global healthcare
clients, focusing on strategy, strategybased transformation, and delivery-system
innovation for payors and providers.
Also contributing to this report were
Strategy& senior associates Brent Nicholson,
Joyce Qian, and Neeharika Vinod, M.D.,
and associates Nissa Mohomed and Kevin
Fennell.
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Strategy&
Executive summary
Accountable care organizations (ACOs) are sure to become fixtures
in the emerging U.S. healthcare landscape. But so far, few of the 600 or
so ACOs in existence today have achieved significant cost savings or
measurably improved patient care. There are various reasons for this
underachievement: poor understanding of the sources of value (e.g.,
total cost of care savings), lack of targeted care management approaches
to capture value, significant gaps in capabilities to manage populations,
and muddled operating models.
At least some of these failures are due to growing pains. There’s been a
flurry of deal making, but Strategy& believes it’s time for “accountable
care 2.0” (AC 2.0) — a next generation of accountable care that shifts
the emphasis from business development to operational excellence. By
evolving to a new data-driven, financially sound, capability-based
approach, the industry can capture the value inherent in ACOs and make
them financially sustainable.
AC 2.0 has five parts, and each endeavors to answer a critical question:
identifying value drivers (“Where is the money?”), choosing the care
management approach (“How do we reduce the total cost of care?”),
defining capabilities (“What capabilities do we need to succeed?”),
designing the operating model (“How do we organize ourselves to
succeed?”), and enhancing the financial model (“How can we structure
contracts to share opportunity and risk appropriately?”).
Strategy&
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The next generation of
accountable care
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is in the process of transforming
healthcare in the United States, but its progress and success will depend
on the effectiveness of new healthcare delivery models such as
accountable care organizations (ACOs), which policymakers hope can
improve the quality of care while also introducing greater efficiencies and
lowering costs.
Given that the ACA specifically encourages the formation of ACOs —
groups of providers and suppliers of services that work together to
coordinate care for the patients they serve — there’s been considerable
excitement and deal making. Today, more than 600 ACOs are in
operation (in both the commercial and Medicare markets). More than
75 percent of hospital executives say they are likely to form or join ACOs
in the near future, according to a recent survey.1 More than 120 new
ACOs were introduced in the latest round of the Medicare Shared Savings
Program in December 2013, the largest wave to date.2
Despite this flurry of activity, however, most ACOs have not achieved
meaningful cost savings or greatly improved the quality of care. For
example, fewer than half of the 114 hospitals and doctor groups that
began ACOs under the health law in 2012 managed to slow Medicare
spending in their first year, according to a report released in January
2014 by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).3 In fact,
only 29 saved enough money to qualify for bonus payments from
Medicare, which is a major incentive to forming an ACO in the first place.
Despite a flurry
of activity, most
ACOs have not
reduced costs
or improved the
quality of care.
Much is at stake for providers. Forming an ACO is a big capital investment
that puts the reputation of providers on the line and can distract from
day-to-day operations. But the opportunities are huge, and some ACOs
are succeeding even in these early days. Palm Beach Accountable Care
Organization, for instance, was one of the 29 ACOs cited by CMS as
qualifying for a bonus. It saved US$22 million, netting it and Medicare
$11 million each. Elsewhere, UPMC has generated $65 million in savings
during the last five years, and payor–provider ACO collaborations such as
AdvocateCare in Illinois have reportedly cut hospital readmissions by
more than 25 percent.4
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Strategy&
Generally, however, ACOs have not performed well, and we have
identified several causes:
• An unclear strategy to create value and be sustainable in the long
term (in fact, one survey found that 20 percent of ACOs are unsure
of their long-term strategy)
• Poor understanding of the sources of value (e.g., total cost of care
savings)
• Lack of targeted care management approaches to capture value
• Significant gaps in the capabilities necessary to manage populations
• A muddled operating model that juggles the old fee-for-service
business model and the newer value-based payment business model
• High investment costs that make it difficult to structure a financial
arrangement between the provider and the payor
For the industry to improve outcomes, we believe it’s time for
“accountable care 2.0” (AC 2.0) — the next generation of accountable
care that shifts the emphasis from business development to operational
excellence. By evolving to a new data-driven, financially sound,
capability-based approach, the industry can capture the value inherent
in ACOs and make them financially sustainable.
It’s time for a
new data-driven,
financially sound,
capability-based
approach to
accountable care.
AC 2.0 has five parts and each endeavors to answer a critical question:
identifying value drivers (“Where is the money?”), choosing the care
management approach (“How do we reduce the total cost of care?”),
defining capabilities (“What capabilities do we need to succeed?”),
designing the operating model (“How do we organize ourselves to
succeed?”), and enhancing the financial model (“How can we structure
contracts to share opportunity and risk appropriately?”).
Strategy&
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Identifying value drivers
Identifying value drivers is a three-step process that uses data and
analytics to answer the question “Where is the money?” By highlighting
areas of excessive medical costs and other waste in the system, as well
as areas to better optimize value, this sets the priorities and agenda for
the remainder of the AC 2.0 methodology.
The first step is to create a medical spending baseline for a given target
population, in order to uncover the drivers of costs and potential
savings. The cost of care typically varies across three dimensions —
disease category, health status, and care setting. Understanding these
characteristics of the target population can help an ACO quantify the
potential cost savings and help focus intervention efforts. For instance,
if a certain disease is prevalent or if the delivery of care is particularly
fragmented, the cost of care is higher.
The second step is to identify value drivers based on external
benchmarks. Through a detailed analysis of external best practices
and benchmarks, an ACO can identify the high-cost components of
medical spending and pinpoint the high-cost outliers, or “hot spots,”
in its own population. These hot spots often represent prime
opportunities to capture value.
The first step is
to uncover the
drivers of costs
and potential
savings.
The third step is to identify value drivers based on internal ACO cost
variability — such as within a facility or among practitioners. When
combined with operational metrics, these internal comparisons can
reveal the true cost drivers and identify opportunities for medical
cost savings.
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Strategy&
Choosing the care management
approach
Once the high-cost drivers and sources of value have been identified, an
ACO must then answer the question “How do we reduce the total cost of
care?”
We have identified three approaches for care management in AC 2.0.
All three focus on treating patients holistically, including behavioral
and/or social needs — particularly for more complex population
segments — to reduce costs without reducing the quality of care.
Targeted intervention is designed to provide care management for
specific disease states. It brings value through unifying resources to
decrease specific causes of healthcare costs.
Care bundles are integrated “products” for well-defined care episodes/
conditions (e.g., knee or hip replacements), combining care, financing,
and engagement across the care continuum with a direct focus on the
consumer. These care bundles decrease cost variability for the specific
set of services and thus make possible a predetermined package price.5
Focus on
treating patients
holistically to
reduce costs
while potentially
improving the
quality of care.
Population management involves comprehensive care and overall
health. This brings value through disease prevention, early detection,
and avoidance of “overall potential costs” — particularly valuable for
the patients with the highest medical costs and most complex needs.6
Many of these patients have underlying behavioral and social issues;
the new care model must address these issues, which can often be the
gateway to reducing the overall medical costs of such populations.
Strategy&
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Defining capabilities
Once an ACO has identified the value drivers and chosen its care
management approaches, it must ask itself, “What capabilities do we
need to succeed?” Most organizations fail to translate their ACO goals
into capabilities and rely too much on existing tool sets. We believe
there must be a direct translation from the value drivers and care
management approaches into a holistic, advanced set of capabilities,
which fall into five broad categories:
•
•
•
•
•
ACO design and setup
Care delivery and coordination
Data aggregation and connectivity
Quality management and incentives
Payments and financial management
ACOs can obtain these five sets of capabilities through in-house
development or by leveraging or acquiring third-party vendors, which
now offer a variety of well-integrated products. There is no one-sizefits-all solution for how each capability should be sourced and which
capabilities should be prioritized, because these decisions depend
on a number of factors, such as the maturity levels of current
capabilities, the availability of vendor solutions, and the extent of
cultural change required to transform the organization into an ACO
model (see Exhibit 1, page 9).
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The ACO must
ask itself, “What
capabilities
do we need to
succeed?”
Strategy&
Exhibit 1
Sample framework of ACO capabilities and sourcing strategy
ACO design
and setup
Care delivery and
coordination
Data aggregation
and connectivity
Quality management
and incentives
Payments and
financial
management
Population identification
and risk analysis
Population health
management
Information
aggregation
Reporting and analytics
Financial reconciliation
and reporting
Product development
Case management
EMR integration
and support
Incentives structure
Claims and
reimbursement
Attribution
Disease management
Contracting and
network management
Utilization and referral
management
Reimbursement
structure
Clinical decision
support
Physician extenders
Provider engagement
Member engagement
New capabilities and vendor solutions
Combination of new and existing capabilities/solutions
Existing capabilities/solutions to be leveraged or enhanced
Note: This example
represents our assessment
of current capability
maturity across major
organizations establishing
ACOs.
Source: Strategy&
Strategy&
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Designing the operating model
Managing the complexities of an ACO is beyond the scope of most existing
operating models. Thus, it’s critical that an ACO ask itself the question
“How do we organize ourselves to succeed in the long term?” Requirements
should include facilitating a tight-knit working relationship among providers,
clarifying decision rights, engaging patients in ways that encourage them to
manage their own care, and focusing on change management to overcome
organizational obstacles. Getting the physicians on board is an essential
imperative that all ACOs need to plan for.
These requirements call for a structured and comprehensive operating model
framework (see Exhibit 2, page 11). Ultimately, each component in the
framework must foster coherence and — most important — a performancecentric culture. Many organizations across all industries aspire to become
more performance-centric. But in the healthcare industry, and particularly in
ACOs, this represents a large-scale change and is particularly challenging, as
many organizations will be required to continue operating in the traditional
volume-based model while transitioning to value-based care. Depending on
their mix of payors, contractual situations, and underlying economics, some
providers will find it best to switch to value-based care for their entire
business, while others will need to take a more calibrated approach,
switching sites or service lines gradually as their situations evolve.
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Getting
physicians
on board is
an essential
imperative.
Strategy&
Exhibit 2
A strong ACO operating model
Governance
Change
management and
communication
Organization
Operating model
dimensions
Metrics and
performance
Processes
Tools and
templates
Source: Strategy&
Strategy&
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Enhancing the financial model
Setting up an ACO requires significant investment and risk on the
part of providers, and in return they expect to share in the cost savings
they generate for payors through bonus programs. But these bonus
programs, inevitably, shift some financial burden to the payors, which
in turn may try to push back on the size of bonuses and/or raise
cost-saving targets. Given this dynamic, ACOs must ask themselves,
“How can we structure contracts to share opportunity and risk
appropriately?”
In the long run, payment models need to gradually evolve, moving
from today’s fee-for-service mentality, with payors retaining the most
financial risk, to a future in which providers share more risk and
collaborate with payors on care, allowing for an appropriate division
of financial benefits. (For example, providers could be paid a set
amount per person regardless of whether that person seeks care
during a set amount of time.) It is critical that ACOs evolve over time
to share both upside and downside risk with providers, as upside-only
arrangements may not create sufficient incentives for real change.
Until then, however, we recommend leveraging analytically rigorous
financial modeling to create payment models that define the level of
risk and value sharing among providers and payors, the methods of
payment, and the mix and conditionality of payment methods. For
example, the payor’s up-front investment might be negotiated in
exchange for payment reductions over time. Financial modeling can
also help address contract clauses like reinsurance, freezing the cost
baseline for multiple years, and the treatment of “shock claims” that
concern both payors and providers.
It is critical that
ACOs evolve over
time to share
both upside and
downside risk
with providers.
One way to mitigate the ACO investment is through a gradual selffunding approach driven by quick wins — instead of a more
comprehensive approach that would demand a bigger up-front
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Strategy&
investment. This involves prioritizing the investments based on the
size of the cost-saving opportunities and the ease of assembling the
necessary capabilities.
Early successes with these quick wins will help establish credibility
with the skeptics and create needed momentum for the next set of
investments. This prioritization process also helps an ACO to identify
the potential opportunities that are too costly, and thus where it
should not devote resources.
Strategy&
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Conclusion
We believe that industry players that use the AC 2.0 approach will
be able to better align investment to inherent value and thus reap
significant benefits. Likewise, those ACOs that do not improve
their approach to accountable care soon may fall behind and be
outmaneuvered by more structured and thoughtful competitors
that are planning for long-term success.
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Strategy&
Endnotes
“Accountable Care Organization and Population Health Management
Trends,” Premier Inc., Dec. 2013.
1
David Muhlestein, “Accountable Care Growth in 2014: A Look Ahead,”
Health Affairs Blog, Jan. 29, 2014.
2
Melanie Evans, “Providers Net Uneven Results from ACO Experiment,”
Modern Healthcare, Jan. 30, 2014.
3
Monifa Thomas, “New Health Practice Leading to Better Patient Care?,”
Chicago Sun-Times, Aug. 3, 2012.
4
Gary D. Ahlquist, Minoo Javanmardian, and Sanjay B. Saxena,
“Healthcare Shifts from à la Carte to Prix Fixe,” strategy+business,
Winter 2013.
5
Joyjit Saha Choudhury, Sundar Subramanian, and Gayatri Rajamani,
“Healthcare for Complex Populations: The Power of Whole-Person Care
Models,” Strategy&, Sept. 2013.
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Strategy&
15
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